212,772 research outputs found
Mason working on Rush Crossing
Bryan Musser, a mason for Purdue Building Services, works on Rush Crossing. During Boiler Gold Rush, more than 5,000 freshmen will cross the tracks to signal the beginning of their relationship with Purdue. (Purdue News Service photo/David Umberger
William Bindley and wife standing in Bindley Bioscience Center walkway
William E. Bindley and his wife, Mary Ann, stand in the walkway connecting the Bindley Bioscience Center with the Birck Nanotechnology Center in Purdue’s Discovery Park. Bindley contributed half of the funds toward the $15 million Bindley Bioscience Center, which will provide space for scientists to conduct interdisciplinary research more effectively. (Purdue News Service Photo/Dave Umberger
Bindley Bioscience Center dedication
William E. Bindley embraces his wife, Mary Ann, atop the new Bindley Bioscience Center as Purdue President Martin C. Jischke looks on. Balloons fly to celebrate the dedication of the $15 million center in Purdue's Discovery Park, which will enhance the university's interdisciplinary research. (Purdue News Service Photo/Dave Umberger
Cary Quadrangle, Cary Knight Spot Grill
The recently enlarged and remodeled Cary Knight Spot Grill will expand its hours to offer lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. during the week. Since it re-opened in August 2006, the restaurant's nighttime hours have appealed to students. The new hours are designed to serve the needs of on-campus workers. (Purdue News Service photo/Dave Umberger
Krannert Building and Rawls Hall
The Krannert building (at left), located on the corner of Grant and State streets, was connected to Rawls Hall when it was completed in 2002 by means of a skywalk and a tunnel. Purdue's Krannert School of Management will celebrate its 50th anniversary in October. (Purdue News Service photo/David Umberger
Martin C. Jischke displaying a Purdue sweatshirt
Martin C. Jischke displays a sweatshirt he received from Purdue University, where it was announced today (Tuesday, 5/23) that he will become Purdue's 10th president. Jischke, president of Iowa State University, attended a news conference at Purdue's West Lafayette campus with his wife, Patty, who adjusted the brim of his new Purdue hat. Jischke (pronounced JIS-key) will succeed Steven C. Beering, who will step down this summer after 17 years as president. Jischke will take the helm of the university Aug. 14. (Purdue News Service Photo by David Umberger
Command module replica being put in place in the atrium of the Neil Armstrong Hall of Engineering
Workers move the full-scale replica of the Apollo 1 command module into place inside the atrium of the Neil Armstrong Hall of Engineering. The capsule is on loan from the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center and will be on display during the hall's dedication on Oct. 27. In 1967, two of the Apollo 1 astronauts, Purdue graduates Virgil "Gus" Grissom and Roger Chaffee, died in a fire during a launch-pad training exercise in the capsule. (Purdue News Service photo/David Umberger
Neil Armstrong Hall of Engineering construction
Construction is complete on Purdue's $53.2 million Neil Armstrong Hall of Engineering. Walkways inside the building look down on an expansive atrium, which has a 53-foot-high ceiling. Hanging in the atrium will be a replica of the Apollo 1 command module identical to the one in which Roger Chaffee, Virgil ""Gus"" Grissom and Ed White died in 1967. (Purdue News Service photo/David Umberger
Gerald D. and Edna E. Mann Hall
Gerald D. and Edna E. Mann Hall, a $12.4 million addition to Purdue's facilities in Discovery Park, will provide laboratories and offices for 100 researchers and staff in the areas of health-care engineering, advanced manufacturing, cancer care, homeland security and other areas. A dedication ceremony is planned at the building on May 15. (Purdue News Service photo/David Umberger) Publication-quality photo is available at http://news.uns.purdue.edu/images/+2007/mann-hall-ext.jp
Students working at John Purdue Room
Abby Cronau, a graduate student from Danville, Ind., checks the reservation list while Martina Stone, a junior from Long Island, N.Y., prepares the menus for the lunch crowd at the John Purdue Room at Purdue University. The hospitality and tourism management students are working at the student-operated restaurant in Stone Hall, which will be moving to a new $12 million hospitality and tourism management building. Purdue will hold a celebration at 11 a.m. Oct. 30 for the new state-of-the-art facility for teaching, research and additional dining options for the campus and community. (Purdue News Service photo/David Umberger
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